I got some data in flight today with the naked(no weights) flywheel. This data is consistent with the ground run, indicating to add about 20g at hole 6.6. It still thinks my engine is gonna fall apart with the 0.5X ips being really high - I dont feel any misfires, so it must be more subtle. I have noticed when doing an inflight mag check - the engine is smoother on the megajolt on the top plugs vs the PMag on the bottom plugs - might swap in my spare PMag to see of that makes a difference.
Bottom line - this gizmo seems to work and provides useful data - I'll continue to refine it.
Next up - add the suggested weight and grab more data. I'm trying to figure out if I can identify the weak cylinder(if there is one) from the vibe data(see below)
I'm open to ideas, suggestions, snarky comments. What have ya got?
Graphs for nerds like me.
View attachment 115047
This is me way out over my skis with a bubble gum analysis to find where the engine vibes are coming from. Polar plot of 0.5X IPS (at cruise rpm) with the quantity and sum of IPS by cylinder quadrant. Not sure is this is valid at all. Shows a bunch of scatter, but combustion of cylinders 1 and 2 seem to be more vibey (technical term) but CHT are well balanced. Maybe the engine brain trust here will have some thoughts - or just have a good chuckle at me like my wife and family do......
Some ideas with help from Gemini:
Key Findings from the Severity Distribution:
- Cylinder 2 (The "Chronic" Roughness): Cylinder 2 has the highest count of "Rough" events (13 hits in the 0.4–0.6 IPS range). This confirms that Cylinder 2 is the most consistent source of the 0.5x "buzz" you feel in cruise.
- Cylinder 1 (The "Sharpest" Hits): Interestingly, while Cylinder 2 is consistently rougher, Cylinder 1 produced the most "Severe" spikes (4 hits >0.6 IPS). This might indicate an occasional misfire or a more erratic combustion event on that front-right cylinder.
- Cylinder 4 (The Healthiest): Cylinder 4 has the most readings in the "Smooth" band (12 hits). Despite being the hottest cylinder (342∘F), it is providing the most stable power pulses.
What this confirms for your diagnosis:
The fact that
Cylinder 2 leads in the moderate-to-rough bands while
Cylinder 1 leads in the severe spikes points to an overall
Bank 1-2 (Front) issue.
- Induction: Check for minor leaks at the intake gaskets for cylinders 1 and 2.
- Ignition: With a wasted spark setup, the same coil often fires 1 & 2. If there is a slight weakness in that specific coil or its wiring, it would explain why both front cylinders are showing higher roughness than the rear.